4.8 Article

Dynamic Assemblies of Molecular Motor Amphiphiles Control Macroscopic Foam Properties

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 142, Issue 22, Pages 10163-10172

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c03153

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council [201706790063]
  2. Croucher Foundation (Croucher Postdoctoral Fellowship)
  3. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWOCW)
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [694345]
  5. Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (Gravitation Program) [024.001.035]
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21174055]
  7. National First-Class Discipline Program of Light Industry Technology and Engineering [LITE2018-21]
  8. 111 Project [B17021]
  9. Postgraduate Research & Practice Innovation Program of Jiangsu Provence [KYCX17_1435]
  10. Excellent Doctoral Cultivation Project of Jiangnan University

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Stimuli-responsive supramolecular assemblies controlling macroscopic transformations with high structural fluidity, i.e., foam properties, have attractive prospects for applications in soft materials ranging from biomedical systems to industrial processes, e.g., textile coloring. However, identifying the key processes for the amplification of molecular motion to a macroscopic level response is of fundamental importance for exerting the full potential of macroscopic structural transformations by external stimuli. Herein, we demonstrate the control of dynamic supramolecular assemblies in aqueous media and as a consequence their macroscopic foam properties, e.g., foamability and foam stability, by large geometrical transformations of dual light/heat stimuli-responsive molecular motor amphiphiles. Detailed insight into the reversible photoisomerization and thermal helix inversion at the molecular level, supramolecular assembly transformations at the microscopic level, and the stimuli-responsive foam properties at the macroscopic level, as determined by UV-vis absorption and NMR spectroscopies, electron microscopy, and foamability and in situ surface tension measurements, is presented. By selective use of external stimuli, e.g., light or heat, multiple states and properties of macroscopic foams can be controlled with very dilute aqueous solutions of the motor amphiphiles (0.2 weight%), demonstrating the potential of multiple stimuli-responsive supramolecular systems based on an identical molecular amphiphile and providing opportunities for future soft materials.

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